Hello!
Mr. Squires is correct when I said no crossover can sometimes be best choice for a loudspeaker system, even if is denial of my work on infinite slope patents, including new patent this year, discussed in previous postings.
My design approach has always been to maximize towards uniform spectral energy in listening room, which with infinite slope means no sweet-spot and flat frequency response in entire listening space, limited only by polar response of drivers in box. Recent patent also achieves good time response, as observed in FFT measurements in home lab and in Tech Center at University's anechoic chamber.
Expensive speakers with elaborate crossovers often fail. Recently I heard example of non-uniform spectral energy distribution from a $30,000+ box. As I sat, I moved head slightly back and forth, no more than 6". The sound changed. Rising and moving about in listening room, I heard many sounds. Some months ago I was demonstrating my 2-wy prototype in same room with myself and 3 others, everyone observed SAME sound balance everywhere in room! That's uniform spectral energy at work! No sweet spot! Here's the catch - the box with no crossover and small driver has also no sweet spot! Uniform spectral energy!
Therefore you can approach uniform spectral energy with one good small driver in a box, no crossover, and some bass enhancement by bass-reflex loading. System gets midrange OK, with loss at frequency extremes, and distortion from cone breakup at high frequencies (generally 4KHz and above). Generally sounding well at low power and on material not too challenging, for easy listening for non-critical audiophiles who listen for the music and not the sound.
RIMO
RIMO
Mr. Squires is correct when I said no crossover can sometimes be best choice for a loudspeaker system, even if is denial of my work on infinite slope patents, including new patent this year, discussed in previous postings.
My design approach has always been to maximize towards uniform spectral energy in listening room, which with infinite slope means no sweet-spot and flat frequency response in entire listening space, limited only by polar response of drivers in box. Recent patent also achieves good time response, as observed in FFT measurements in home lab and in Tech Center at University's anechoic chamber.
Expensive speakers with elaborate crossovers often fail. Recently I heard example of non-uniform spectral energy distribution from a $30,000+ box. As I sat, I moved head slightly back and forth, no more than 6". The sound changed. Rising and moving about in listening room, I heard many sounds. Some months ago I was demonstrating my 2-wy prototype in same room with myself and 3 others, everyone observed SAME sound balance everywhere in room! That's uniform spectral energy at work! No sweet spot! Here's the catch - the box with no crossover and small driver has also no sweet spot! Uniform spectral energy!
Therefore you can approach uniform spectral energy with one good small driver in a box, no crossover, and some bass enhancement by bass-reflex loading. System gets midrange OK, with loss at frequency extremes, and distortion from cone breakup at high frequencies (generally 4KHz and above). Generally sounding well at low power and on material not too challenging, for easy listening for non-critical audiophiles who listen for the music and not the sound.
RIMO
RIMO